Gardening Guide

Greenhouse Vegetable Gardening Section


 

Greenhouse Vegetable Gardening Navigation

Main Home Page
Tell A Friend about us
Herbs |
Safe Pest Control Tips For Your Garden |
Six Ticks For Organic Gardening |
My First Gardening Experience |
Using Gardening To Get In Shape |
Growing Your Own Herbs |
Importance Of Gardening Gloves |
Gardening For Food |
Gardening To Relax |
Gardening In A Box |

List of Gardening Articles

Greenhouse Vegetable Gardening Best seller



Best Greenhouse Vegetable Gardening products


Green Marketing
Sitemap



Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Gardening
Email:
First Name:


Main Greenhouse Vegetable Gardening sponsors


 
Home Vegetable Gardening
Home Vegetable Gardening
by F. F. Rockwell
Our Price: $7.99
Used from: $7.99

All New Square Foot Gardening
All New Square Foot Gardening
by Mel Bartholomew
Our Price: $11.64
Used from: $9.18

Gardening Basics For Dummies®, Mini Edition
Gardening Basics For Dummies®, Mini Edition
by Steven A. Frowine
The Vegetable Gardener's Bible, 2nd Edition
The Vegetable Gardener's Bible, 2nd Edition
by Edward C. Smith
Our Price: $16.47
Used from: $11.99

You Grow Girl: The Groundbreaking Guide to Gardening
You Grow Girl: The Groundbreaking Guide to Gardening
by Gayla Trail
Our Price: $11.55
Used from: $7.26

Successful Container Gardening
Successful Container Gardening
by Douglas Green
Vegetable Gardening in the North
Vegetable Gardening in the North
by Douglas Green

 

Welcome to Gardening Guide

 

Greenhouse Vegetable Gardening Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Installing a Drip Irrigation System

from:
By Deb St. George, on Drip Irrigation in your Gardening Guide From Spiritravels.com





If you’re looking for ways to keep your garden watered without wasting too much time and money, you’ve probably gone through a lot of options in your mind. Maybe you’ve considered a sprinkler, a hose, or a good old-fashioned watering can. All of these methods might be convenient, but most of the time you will end up wasting water on plants that don’t need any more. If you live in a drought stricken area like I do, you know that every bit of water counts. I ended up getting a drip irrigation system. I haven’t regretted this decision at all.


When you install a drip irrigation system, you can choose one of two varieties: above ground and below ground. The above ground version drips small amounts of water continuously onto the ground, and allows it to soak in. It is all regulated from a pressure controller, which ensures that the water just comes out at a drip instead of a spray or a stream. These pressure regulators are very inexpensive. The whole drip system can be set up with a pressure regulator and a garden hose with holes poked in it (although it is ideal for you to get a pipe designed for this type of use,
I’ve found that the hose method works acceptably).


The underground system is a bit more of a pain to install and maintain. But if you’re really into the aesthetic aspect of your garden and don’t want any visible watering system, then you might consider it worth it. It’s essentially the same as the above ground version, only a small trench is dug for the hose or pipe prior to any planting. This allows the water direct access to the roots for the most watering efficiency. Plus, you can impress your neighbors by having a beautiful garden without ever going outside to water it! They’ll be baffled.


To choose between the two systems, you need to take several things into account. Do you have the same plant layout year round? If it is always changing, you probably won’t want to bury your hose. It can be a pain to dig it up and re-align it with all your new plants every year or so. Even if your plant layout never changes, you need to consider how much you really mind seeing a hose in your garden. If it really bothers you to the extent that you’re willing to work for a few hours to get rid of it, then by all means bury it. But otherwise I would suggest staying above ground if for nothing else than the convenience of repairing and rearranging.


One of the main advantages of the drip irrigation system is its efficiency. Instead of spraying large amounts of water willy-nilly like a hose does, it makes the most of your precious water by putting it exactly where it is needed. It can also provide your garden with constant watering, instead of just having to go thirsty whenever you’re not around to water it.


So if you’re looking for an easy, cheap, convenient, and efficient alternative watering method, you should go out to the gardening store today and purchase the necessary items to install a drip irrigation system. I think you’ll be surprised at how much easier it is to maintain a garden after you have it.

 

Greenhouse Vegetable Gardening News

Ag's future importance growing - The Morning Sun


Ag's future importance growing
The Morning Sun
You see a little movement back to the garden, but not a lot. I tell the students that you may be hungry because it's lunch time but you really don't know hunger like a lot of people in the world. A. Yes, vegetables and flowers. I love the greenhouse.

and more »

Read more...


'Hardening off' prepares transplants for outdoor growing - Fairbanks Daily News-Miner


'Hardening off' prepares transplants for outdoor growing
Fairbanks Daily News-Miner
The time to harden off is a week to 10 days before you intend to set plants out into the greenhouse or garden. I know some gardeners who feel that flowers and vegetables being raised in a greenhouse do not need to be hardened off, but I disagree.

and more »

Read more...


Wheaton business teaches organic lawn care - Chicago Daily Herald


Wheaton business teaches organic lawn care
Chicago Daily Herald
Scheffler, a frequent speaker at garden clubs and environmental groups, said educating other people on how to care for their lawns and gardens is a big part of what he's about. “It's as much a consulting business as a service business, ...

Read more...


Community Garden donates space to Station 18 firefighters - Patch.com


Community Garden donates space to Station 18 firefighters
Patch.com
But, they said, the area around the station doesn't get enough sunlight for vegetables to grow well there. Diana Wood, Dunwoody Community Garden greenhouse manager and organizer of the plant sale, told the firefighters there was plenty of light in the ...

and more »

Read more...


Home and Garden briefs for May 20 - North County Times


Home and Garden briefs for May 20
North County Times
... vegetable row crops such as berries, and a lemon grove. The Valley Center tour features a vineyard and winery, free-range livestock, a citrus grower, and a greenhouse growing facility. Tickets are $20 for adults and $10 for children 6 to 17.

Read more...


Business blooms with season at Van Atta's, greenhouses - Lansing State Journal


Business blooms with season at Van Atta's, greenhouses
Lansing State Journal
With the dangers of morning frost mostly past, now is the time to plant your flowers and vegetables. / Lansing State Journal file photo • Expect to pay $12 to $14 at local greenhouses for flats of flowers; about $10 and up for hanging baskets.

Read more...


Miracle-Gro Kids Greenhouse - TheCelebrityCafe.com


Miracle-Gro Kids Greenhouse
TheCelebrityCafe.com
The Miracle-Gro Kids Greenhouse was created with tomorrow's gardeners in mind. Each product has an assortment of all-inclusive flowers and vegetables. Plus, each set has exclusive, specially formulated Miracle-Gro that allows seedlings to sprout in ...

and more »

Read more...


 

Warning: fopen(./cache/greenhouse-vegetable-gardening.html) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/spiritra/public_html/gardening/datas/pages.php on line 95

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/spiritra/public_html/gardening/datas/pages.php on line 96

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/spiritra/public_html/gardening/datas/pages.php on line 97